'Thin Blue Line' Bill to Expand Federal Death Penalty Advances in Congress
Just what we need: some more overlapping federal and state laws.

A bill to expand the federal death penalty to include the killing of state and local police officers advanced through a Republican-controlled committee in Congress Thursday, over the objections of civil liberties and criminal justice groups who argue it is unnecessary and duplicative.
The House Judiciary Committee advanced a bill Thursday, the Thin Blue Line Act, by a 19-12 vote that would make the killing of a state or local law enforcement officer during the commission of a federal crime an aggravating factor for juries to consider when weighing a death penalty sentence.
The legislation would be largely symbolic. Federal death penalty cases are exceedingly rare, and executions at the federal level are even rarer. The last federal execution took place in 2001, when Timothy McVeigh was executed for the Oklahoma City bombing. Most homicide cases are prosecuted by states.
While Judiciary Committee chairman Rep. Bob Goodlatte (R-VA) noted that the practical application of the law would be limited, it "is nevertheless vitally important in the scenarios where it will apply," he argued in a statement Thursday.
"For example, it would likely apply in some terrorism cases," Goodlatte continued. "We all remember that the terrorists who bombed the Boston Marathon killed a MIT police officer during their flight from justice. It also would apply to situations where a state or local officer is killed serving as a member of a Federal task force."
Including officers serving on federal task forces would be notable, since many state and local police officers participate in federal anti-drug and anti-terrorism task forces.
The bill was supported by police unions, such as the Fraternal Order of Police. Over the past several years, members of Congress and state legislators have introduced numerous "blue lives matter" bills to strengthen penalties for assaulting and killing police officers, including making police a protected class under hate crime laws.
Attorney General Jeff Sessions introduced similar legislation in 2015, when he was a U.S. senator, saying "the alarming spike in violence directed against the men and women entrusted with ensuring the safety and order of our society must be stopped,"
However, civil liberties and criminal justice groups oppose the bill. The American Civil Liberties Union said in a statement Thursday that the bill "is an unnecessary expansion of the federal death penalty."
"Congress should be advancing police reforms that are supported by both law enforcement and the communities they serve, but, unfortunately, these bills only cater to Attorney General Sessions and President Trump's misguided 'law and order' agenda," ACLU legislative counsel Kanya Bennett said.
The NAACP Legal Defense Fund also called the legislation "duplicative" and "unnecessary," saying it will worsen the racial disparities in the already-troubled criminal justice system.
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The legislation would be largely symbolic.
The best kind of legislation. I'm sure, however, that no federal prosecutors will be rushing to double convict some cop killer.
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"Thin Blue Line Bill" was my nickname in college.
I thought conservatives were against Federalizing crime? Or is this a RINO thing. I get confused these days.
Can't states convict cop killers without help?
It's more about making the warrior class feel a bit more special.
the objections of civil liberties and criminal justice groups who argue it is unnecessary and duplicative.
This.
For what it's worth, when Lee Oswald was arrested for shooting JFK the only charge he faced was first degree murder in Texas. He would most certainly have bee sentenced to death for that.
However the shock of someone taking the life of the holy personage of the President caused Congress to decide it was necessary to hang regicides twice.
He kind of did get the death sentence....
Sentencing can only happen after conviction. Otherwise it's murder.
OT: You wouldn't believe it but attitudes are changing in the Louisiana state legislature. There's a serious bipartisan effort to abolish the death penalty and they're reducing criminal penalties and expanding parole access in an effort to reduce over incarceration. Dude this is great news.
There's gotta be some corrupt angle to it. Nothing happens in LA without it.
All things being equal, if the ACLU and the NAACP are against a particular piece of legislation, then it's probably okay or maybe even a good idea.
Just what we need: some more overlapping federal and state laws.
That genie's out of the bottle.
There was recently a convenience store robbery that went sideways and it ended up involving several local and federal agencies responding, including the ATFE & C.
I'd have less of an issue with this bill if it said if you kill ANYONE in the commission of a federal crime, you're eligible for the death penalty.
It's the singling out of police officers as being more valuable that is most objectionable.
They already got this when Bill Clinton expanded the federal death penalty in the 90s-before that, there were only a few crimes eligible for the federal death penalty. Now, it covers everything including killing a federal poultry inspector to killing in a national park.
Because state and local police are not part of the federal government, I don't think that such a law would be constitutional, since it supersedes state laws.
I'm kind of of the opinion that it's unconstitutional as well. You could use the killing of local/state police as an aggravating factor probably, but giving someone a death sentence for a crime that's not applicable under federal guidelines because they committed another crime that you don't have jurisdiction is probably a reach.
If there is going to be a death penalty for cop killers, then there needs to be one for killer cops of unarmed civilians who are not committing any kind of violent act.
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